On Sunday 29 April 2001 11:21 am, you wrote:
> Telnet is run under xinetd.d not services, so what I guess I would had done
> is in /etc/xinetd.d/ dir made a copy of telnet to telnet2 and just edit
> telnet2 for your port to use. Then disable telnet and enable telnet2, then
> restart xinetd.
Hi Mike..
Well - I need both port 23 and 24 for telnetting. By default I need port 23
for the unknowns who telnet and don't know I have another service. So, port
23 serves that service. And then there is port 24 for other telnet services..
And like you were thinking - all I did was copy /etc/xinetd.d/telnet to
telnet2 making internal changes as needed, and felt that along with opening
port 24 in the services file would have been enough. I see not.
I also see there is a 'typo' in the first of my two lines I quoted, from my
services file. I better fix that before I go too far..
>
> Mike
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Ted Gervais" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Sunday, April 29, 2001 9:06 AM
> Subject: telnet - port 24
>
> > Just tried to set up port 24 on telnet and I get -
> >
> > "telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: Connection refused"
> >
> > What I did was to copy /etc/xinetd.d/telnet to telnet2 and add it to
> > /etc/services file:
> >
> > telent2 24/tcp # - private mail system
> > telnet2 24/udp # - private mail system
> >
> > Did I forget a place to put it , or am I totally on the wrong track??
> >
> > Of course I ran chkconfig --add telnet2, and chkconfig --level 2345
>
> telnet2
>
> > on.
>
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--
Ted Gervais
Coldbrook, Nova Scotia Canada.
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